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J Epidemiol Community Health 2009;63:832-838 doi:10.1136/jech.2008.080986
  • Research report

Heterogeneity by age in educational inequalities in cause-specific mortality in women in the Region of Madrid

  1. C Martínez1,
  2. E Regidor2,3,
  3. E Sánchez4,
  4. C Pascual2,
  5. L de la Fuente3,5
  1. 1
    Service of Preventive Medicine, Hospital Clínico San Carlos, Madrid, Spain
  2. 2
    Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain
  3. 3
    CIBER Epidemiología y Salud Pública (CIBERESP), Spain
  4. 4
    Epicentre, Paris, France
  5. 5
    Plan Nacional de Sida, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain
  1. Correspondence to Dr E Regidor, Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Ciudad Universitaria, 28040 Madrid, Spain; enriqueregidor{at}hotmail.com
  • Accepted 17 March 2009
  • Published Online First 1 July 2009

Abstract

Background: Within Europe, women in the southern regions have the lowest inequalities in mortality. This study evaluates inequalities in mortality from different causes by educational level and their contribution to total mortality inequalities in adult women in one of these regions.

Methods: The 2001 population census in the Region of Madrid was linked with deaths in the following 20 months according to the mortality registry. The population of women was stratified into three age groups, and the mortality rate ratio and mortality rate difference by educational level were estimated in each age group. The contribution of each cause of death to total mortality inequality was estimated based on the absolute index of inequality.

Results: In women aged 45–64 years, no significant relation was observed between educational level and mortality from the leading causes of death. In women aged 25–44 years and in those aged 65 and over, the mortality rate ratios and differences from the leading causes of death gradually increased from the highest to the lowest educational level. AIDS, respiratory diseases and digestive diseases, in young adult women, and cardiovascular diseases, in older women, were the causes of death that contributed most to inequality in mortality.

Conclusions: At the beginning of the twenty-first century, mortality inequalities by educational level were not seen in middle-aged adult women in the Region of Madrid. In contrast, mortality inequalities were found in young women and in older women, although the main causes of death that contributed to these inequalities were different in each group.

Footnotes

  • Contributors: CM and ER originated and designed the study and coordinated the writing of the article. ES and CP contributed to the analysis of this study and to the drafting of the paper. LF contributed to the interpretation of the results and to the drafting of the paper. All authors contributed to the final version of the article.

  • Funding This study was supported by a grant from the Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias (no. PI060115).

  • Competing interests None.

  • Provenance and Peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

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